HmmMysterious
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- Dec 30, 2021
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I guess it's official.Her NAMUS is down!
Rest in peace Patrona Patmios.
I guess it's official.Her NAMUS is down!
Oh no!
I actually think it's Doe Network that has the wrong link/ a broken link.Oh no!
I was linking the NAMUS from the Doe Network...
Maybe NAMUS moved the link...
Now I'm embarrassed.....
Emailed the regional specialist for this case and asked when the NamUs file will be taken down. I'm hoping for a quick response.The NamUs page should be gone over the next couple of days, maybe hours considering Doe Network already marked her as identified
Ok she said the files are only taken down when law enforcement/investigating agencies have formally confirmed a resolution. But since Doe Network has declared her identified, they probably already have.Emailed the regional specialist for this case and asked when the NamUs file will be taken down. I'm hoping for a quick response.
I can't imagine what her family must be feeling. Between being adopted, immigrating internationally, and likely not being reported missing, it's such a slim chance she'd ever be identified, even through FGG. She's lucky to have a family so determined to find her. Even if this isn't the reunion they were hoping for, their efforts restored her name.I am shaking right now. This lady's family members have been searching for her for YEARS in a Greek genealogy group that I am a member of. I never thought these two interests of mine would intersect like this. Poor, poor girl.
Yes, I have shared Little Miss Panasoffkee and another Greek male doe who was recently identified. Little Miss was featured on a TV program in Greece and is somewhat well-known. I have a feeling she may have been adopted too. There was a booming adoption system in Greece around midcentury and unfortunately much of it was shady and sometimes outright kidnapping. Little Miss's parents may have been told she died at birth in order to be sold to foreign adoptive parents.I can't imagine what her family must be feeling. Between being adopted, immigrating internationally, and likely not being reported missing, it's such a slim chance she'd ever be identified, even through FGG. She's lucky to have a family so determined to find her. Even if this isn't the reunion they were hoping for, their efforts restored her name.
Is this genealogy group aware of Little Miss Panasoffkee? She's thought to be a Greek Doe as well. Maybe she came from similar circumstances and can be identified the same way.
They did attempt FGG back in 2011, when it was in its infancy. And you are right. They weren't able to identify her by this method. They were able to find maternally related matches, however, 2 things. 1. Investigators never said how close the relationship was between Patra and these discovered relatives. 2. Those maternally related folks were interviewed and didn't know who she was. So we concluded here on WS it must have been a case of adoption. Appears we were right.I can't imagine what her family must be feeling. Between being adopted, immigrating internationally, and likely not being reported missing, it's such a slim chance she'd ever be identified, even through FGG. She's lucky to have a family so determined to find her. Even if this isn't the reunion they were hoping for, their efforts restored her name.
Is this genealogy group aware of Little Miss Panasoffkee? She's thought to be a Greek Doe as well. Maybe she came from similar circumstances and can be identified the same way.
This breaks my heart. I hope they know that hundreds of people here in the US have been searching for them, too, in order to give Patra back her name and reunite her with her family.According to bio family, the name Patra was a nickname for a different full name. I'm going back through some older comments that were written in Greek. Bio family had no English knowledge and were desperately seeking advocates in the US. This is so utterly sad, they were searching for a woman in her 70's